Uma partição de junco [em torno de um vinhedo], se entre um junco e outro houver menos de dez hanbreadths através dos quais uma criança pode entrar [passar], é [considerado] uma partição. Uma cerca [em torno de um vinhedo] violada, de até dez côvados, é considerada uma entrada [e ele pode plantar sementes ao lado]. [Se a brecha for maior que isso [dez côvados], é proibido [semear à direita] em frente à brecha. Se houver várias brechas na cerca [nenhuma maior que dez côvados], se a [área total] ainda em pé for maior que a [área total] que foi violada, será permitida, mas se a [área total] da qual violado for maior que a [área total] do que está em pé, é proibido [semear à direita] em frente ao rompimento.
English Explanation of Mishnah Kilayim
Introduction
Our mishnah continues to discuss what constitutes a legal partition in order to separate seeds on one side from a vineyard on the other. If the partition is sufficient, it will be permitted to sow seeds on one side and a vineyard on the other.
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English Explanation of Mishnah Kilayim
A partition of reeds: if between one reed and another there are less than three handbreadths, [the space] through which a kid (young could enter, it counts as a [legally effective] partition. For the partition of reeds to count, there must be less than three handbreadths between each reed. Three handbreadths is considered by the mishnah the amount of space that a kid (goat) would need to enter. (Goats would have been the pests farmers would have wanted to most keep out of their fields). Note that in this case there is more open space than filled space because the reeds are surely less than three handbreadths. However, since there is no open space more than three handbreadths, the entire partition counts as a fence.
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English Explanation of Mishnah Kilayim
A [stone] fence which has been broken through up to [the length of] ten cubits, [the breach] is [regarded] as a doorway; more than that, opposite the breach it is prohibited [to sow seeds]. A stone fence can have a breach up to ten cubits (about five meters) in length and still count as a fence. In such a case one could plant seeds even opposite the breached area, because this breach is treated as if it were a door. However, if there is more than ten cubits of open space, he can’t sow seeds opposite the breach.
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English Explanation of Mishnah Kilayim
If there were many breaches in the fence, if that which remains standing exceeds that which is broken through, it is permitted [to sow there]. But if the breached sections exceed those which remain standing, it is forbidden [to sow opposite the breaches.] If there were many breaches each less than ten cubits, the rule is that for the fence to count, the standing portion must exceed the breached portion. If it does, then he can sow seeds even opposite the breached portion. However, if the breached portion exceeds the standing portions, then he can’t sow seeds opposite the breached portions, although he can still plant opposite the standing portion.